Sunday, July 9, 2017

Texas Gospel, Vol. 5: Devil Can't Harm A Praying Man 1956/57

The organ swells and we are once again at Gospel Sunday.

"In the 1950s, if you were a quartet and a Peacock Recording Artist, man, you were something.
Some of the top quartets of the decade were on Peacock’s roster. Thanks to the Texas Gospel series
by Opal Nations and Acrobat Records, the vast majority of Houston-based
Peacock’s “World’s Greatest Spirituals” singles from its 1500 and 1700
series are now available on CD, some for the first time.
Sadly, after releasing the first two Texas Gospel volumes,
Acrobat is no more. Nevertheless, gospel historian and project
annotator Opal Nations has picked up the standard and is stewarding
sales of Texas Gospel Volumes 3, 4, and 5. He plans for Texas Gospel to be a seven-volume series of Peacock singles when all is said and done. Meanwhile, this three-CD set, subtitled Devil Can’t Harm a Praying Man
(a 1955 Dixie Hummingbirds song included here), features 85 tracks and a
60-page illustrated booklet by Nations that is so thick it hardly fits
in the jewel case. (The liner notes are available for reading at www.pewburner.com/about_us.html.)
The 85 tracks on Vols. 3 – 5 take the listener from Peacock 1736 to
1781, or from 1951 to 1957, and feature quartets such as the Dixie
Hummingbirds, Sensational Nightingales, Original Five Blind Boys (tracks
not already included on a separate Acrobat set dedicated to the Archie
Brownlee aggregation), Spirit of Memphis, Gospelaires of Dayton and
singers Jessie Mae Renfro and Cleophus Robinson. Gospel hits such as
the Birds’ “Trouble in My Way” and “Christian’s Automobile,” and the
‘Gales’ “Somewhere to Lay My Head” and “See How They Done My Lord” are
intermixed with lesser-known but equally exquisite tracks such as the
Spirit of Memphis’ “When” and the Blind Boys’ pop-flavored “There’s No
Need to Cry,” featuring a passionate lead by Brownlee.
Even if you already own many of these recordings on vinyl, there is
something about hearing them in chronological order. First, the
experience hammers home just how much give and take there was between
the “street corner” vocal groups of the mid-50s and gospel quartets when
it came to employing doo-wop background vocals, impassioned leads,
scooping and soaring falsetto leaps. Second, it helps you appreciate
even more the artistry of the Dixie Hummingbirds and Sensational
Nightingales and their respective leads Ira Tucker and Julius Cheeks.
Third, hearing the various quartets in one sitting gives you a sense of
the rivalry of the day, and how amazingly different the Spirit of
Memphis was turning out to be. Fourth, it’s easier to carry around than
a box full of 78s."Five of Five Stars
Reviewed by Bob Marovich for The Black Gospel Blog.